Funded Awards

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) BRAIN Initiative funds a wide-variety of research: toolmakers, trainees, individual labs testing new hypotheses, and large, team-based efforts aiming to catalyze neuroscience inquiry forward. Explore NIH BRAIN Initiative funded awards listed below. Click on the project title to learn more about it within NIH RePORTER.

To see more NIH-funded awards and associated publications, please visit the NIH RePORTER

Title
Investigator(s)
Institution
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunity #
TitleIntegrated functional and structural analysis of an entire column in mouse primary visual cortex
Investigator
Reza Abbasi Asl
Institute
university of california, san francisco
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY Neurons in the visual cortex form an intricate connectivity structure and topographic arrangement. The structural and morphological organization of the neurons is known to constrain its functional properties.
TitleIntegration of social and nonsocial information in the primate brain
Investigator
Joseph Simon
Institute
icahn school of medicine at mount sinai
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary Primate species frequently use social information to inform their decisions, for instance, to help make inferences about potential threats or rewards in the environment.
TitleIntroducing Neuroscience and Neurocomputation Concepts to High School Students using Brain-based Neurorobots
Investigator
Gregory John Gage, Christopher Aiden Harris
Institute
backyard brains, inc.
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

Understanding the brain is a profound and fascinating challenge, captivating the scientific community and the public alike. The lack of effective treatment for most brain disorders makes training the next generation of neuroscientists, engineers and physicians a key concern.

TitleInvestigating descending control of walking
Investigator
Helen Horan Yang
Institute
harvard medical school
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary/Abstract Circuits in the brain control motor output to generate the precise behaviors required for survival. Dysfunction of these circuits results in devastating movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
TitleInvestigating the microcircuit determinants of neural population activity through comparative analysis of latent dynamics across cortical areas in the mouse
Investigator
Audrey Sederberg
Institute
university of minnesota
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary A key goal in neuroscience is determining how microcircuit structure predicts circuit function. An intriguing idea, supported by some theoretical models, is that variation in microcircuit composition supports functional specialization.
TitleInvestigating the pathomechanisms underlying Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
Investigator
Julia Alexis Jones
Institute
scripps research institute, the
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous group of inherited peripheral neuropathies that is characterized by damage to long motor and sensory axons.
TitleInvestigating the Role of Microglia in Methamphetamine Use Disorder
Investigator
Samara Jo Vilca
Institute
university of miami school of medicine
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
ABSTRACT Substance use disorder is a chronic relapsing disease that is characterized by repeated drug use despite negative consequences.
TitleKilohertz volumetric imaging of neuronal action potentials in awake behaving mice
Investigator
Liang Gao, Peyman Golshani
Institute
university of california los angeles
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
High-speed volumetric imaging of dynamic neuronal activity over long periods is a challenging but essential goal in neuroscience. Conventional optical measurements of neuronal activity mostly rely on calcium signals.
TitleLocus coeruelus-prefrontal interactions for flexible decision-making
Investigator
Joshua I Gold
Institute
university of pennsylvania
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Higher brain functions include the ability to learn expectations about the world, update those expectations appropriately when given new sensory information, and use those continually updating expectations to guide behavior.
TitleLong-term consequences of visual working memory
Investigator
Megan Teresa Debettencourt
Institute
university of chicago
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary The ability to remember information, whether after short or long delays, is a fundamental human ability.
TitleMachine learning analyses of single-cell multi-modal data for understanding cell-type functional genomics and gene regulation
Investigator
Daifeng Wang
Institute
university of wisconsin-madison
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary Understanding cell-type-specific gene functions, expression dynamics, and regulatory mechanisms in complex brains is still challenging.
TitleMachine Learning Augmented Discovery of AAV Capsids for Cell Type Specific Access into Human Neurons and Glia
Investigator
Tomasz Nowakowski, David V Schaffer, Vikaas Singh Sohal
Institute
university of california berkeley
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary The human brain contains an astonishing diversity of neuronal and glial cell types distributed across dozens of functional areas.
TitleMechanisms of Transplanted Cortical Interneuron Survival and Function
Investigator
Benjamin Rakela
Institute
university of california, san francisco
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project Summary Cortical interneurons (cINs) are inhibitory cells that are born in surplus far from the cortex. During prenatal timepoints, cIN precursors migrate into the mouse visual cortex (V1) where only a fraction are selected to survive.
TitleMesh electronics for understanding space encoding in the amphibian brain
Investigator
Lisa Giocomo, Guosong Hong, Lauren A O'connell
Institute
stanford university
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Many animals rely on spatial cognition for daily survival in order to recognize familiar places and process movements through or between locations. A variety of space-encoding cells in the hippocampus are important for spatial behaviors in mammals.
TitleMesoscale bidirectional two-photon holographic optogenetics
Investigator
Hillel Adesnik
Institute
university of california berkeley
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY Achieving a detailed understanding of the neural codes of sensation, action, and cognition requires technologies that can causally perturb each of the major dimensions of population coding one at a time with extremely high precision across multiple brain areas.
TitleMicroscope system for large scale optical imaging of neuronal activity using kilohertz frame rates
Investigator
Jacob R Glaser
Institute
microbrightfield, llc
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number

This project aims to develop the 2P-ActivityScope™, a revolutionary new microscope based on a technological breakthrough called second-generation Scanned Line Angular Projection (SLAP2) two photon laser scanning microscopy that was recently developed by Dr.

TitleMiniaturized silicon neurochemical probe to monitor brain chemistry
Investigator
Yurii A Vlasov
Institute
university of illinois at urbana-champaign
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Miniaturized silicon neurochemical probe to monitor brain chemistry.
TitleModeling the development of orientation selectivity, maps, and the associated recurrent circuit
Investigator
Kenneth D Miller
Institute
columbia university health sciences
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
ABSTRACT Much evidence suggests that the development of orientation selectivity and maps in primary visual cortex (V1) is instructed by spontaneous patterns of input activity, without the necessity of visual experience.
TitleModulation of Cerebellar Activity by Electrical and Focused Ultrasound Stimulation
Investigator
Eric J Lang, Omer Oralkan, Mesut Sahin
Institute
new jersey institute of technology
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
The cerebellum has been overlooked for its potential for neuromodulation for decades.
TitleMolecular and circuit mechanisms of nausea-associated behaviors
Investigator
Chuchu Zhang
Institute
harvard medical school
Fiscal Year
Funding Opportunities Number
Project summary Nausea is an unpleasant sensation of visceral malaise often accompanied by an involuntary urge to vomit. Nausea responses to toxin ingestion and infection are evolutionarily beneficial survival behaviors that avoid or expel toxins which may cause peripheral tissue damage.
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